14 今週のお気に入り 19

ウィークエンドサンシャイン
ブロードキャスターピーター・バラカンのナビゲートで送るウィークエンド・ミュージックマガジン。独特の嗅覚とこだわりの哲学でセレクトしたグッド・サウンドと、ワールドワイドな音楽情報を伝える。
http://www4.nhk.or.jp/sunshine/
放送日: 2014年 5月10日(土)
放送時間: 午前7:20〜午前9:00(100分)
ピーター・バラカン

THIS WEEK'S PLAYLIST
http://www4.nhk.or.jp/sunshine/66/
(曲名 / アーティスト名 // アルバム名)
01. She Does It Right / Dr. Feelgood // Down By The Jetty
02. Ice Cream For Crow / Captain Beefheart & The Magic Band // Ice Cream For Crow
03. Keep Your Lamps Trimmed And Burning / Hot Tuna // First Pull Up, Then Pull Down
04. Boom-Boom-Boom / Leon Thomas // Blues And The Soulful Truth
05. Everywhere I Go / Bonnie Raitt & David Lindley // Looking Into You: A Tribute To Jackson Browne
06. Not Dark Yet / Jimmy LaFave // Cimarron Manifesto
07. Duquesne Whistle / Benmont Tench // You Should Be So Lucky
08. You Should Be So Lucky / Benmont Tench // You Should Be So Lucky

Cold on the Shoulder

Cold on the Shoulder

09. Fare Thee Well / Tony Rice // Cold On The Shoulder
マー・ウェスト

マー・ウェスト

10. Mar West / Tony Rice Unit // Mar West
Tunesmith Retrofit

Tunesmith Retrofit

11. Tight To The Jar / Kelly Joe Phelps // Tunesmith Retrofit
12. Bagadaji Sirifoula / Toumani Diabate & Sidiki Diabate // Toumani & Sidiki
13. Tijaniya / Toumani Diabate & Sidiki Diabate // Toumani & Sidiki
14. Lampedusa / Toumani Diabate & Sidiki Diabate // Toumani & Sidiki


世界の快適音楽セレクション
"快適音楽"を求めるギターデュオのゴンチチによる、ノンジャンル・ミュージック番組。
http://www4.nhk.or.jp/kaiteki/
放送日: 2014年 5月10日(土)
放送時間: 午前9:00〜午前11:00(120分)
ゴンチチ
湯浅学

− おじいさんとおばあさんの音楽 −

「山の温泉旅館」 (ゴンチチ
(4分00秒)
<EPIC ESCL-2552>

「パサディナのおばあちゃん」 (ジャン&ディーン)
(2分25秒)
東芝EMI TOCP-67332>

「オールド・マンズ・ソング」 (マレー・マクラクラン)
(3分26秒)
<EPIC KE31902>

インディアン・サマー」 (ルビー・ブラフ)
(4分07秒)
<LONE HILL JAZZ LHJ10210>

「金婚式」 マリ作曲
(4分07秒)
管弦楽ロンドン交響楽団
(指揮)スタンリー・ブラック
CBS SONY 32DC561>

「おばあちゃん、どうしてなの?」(オマーラ・ポルトゥオンド
(3分05秒)
<CARAMBA CRACD241>

「サーペンタイン」 (オコウ)
(3分03秒)
<AZ 5322947>

「カジ・ババ(おばあさんに伝えて)」
(ボバン&マルコ・マルコヴィッチ・オーケスター)
(3分10秒)
<PIRANHA CD-PLR2339>

「サム・ジ・オールド・アコーディオン・マン」
(ルース・エッティング、マリオ・ペリー)
(3分11秒)
<AUDIO BOOK AB131>

「おばあさんのくすぐり歌」 (エライジャ・マンギタク)
(0分52秒)
<VICTOR VICG-5333>

グランドファーザーズ・ワルツ」
ビル・エヴァンススタン・ゲッツ
(5分30秒)
<POLYDOR POCJ-2389>

「マザー・オブ・アール」 (ジョー・ピューマ
4分33秒
<EMIミュージック TOCJ-50118>

「恋の元素記号」 (グランドファーザーズ
(3分48秒)
P-VINE PCD-25150>

「トレイル・オブ・ティアーズ」
(グランドマザーズ、ジミー・カール・ブラック)
(3分43秒)
RHINO REC. RNSP302>

「山のおじいさん」 (サヌリム)
(3分07秒)
SAMSUNG ENT. SCO-160SUL>

「グランマズ・ドレイデル」 (ミッキー・カッツ)
(2分37秒)
<IDELSOHN SOCIETY RSR020>

「アイル・ビー・ア・フレンド・トゥー・ジーザス」
(ジョセフ・スペンス、ブルーミング・ロザリー・ロバーツ)
(2分40秒)
<ROUNDER REC. CD2021>

「レディ・デイ」 (トニー・スコット
(5分31秒)
<PHILOLOGY W76.2>

「おらのじいさまおやじのおやじ」 (藤山一郎安西愛子
(3分03秒)
コロムビア COCP-36728>

「初恋」 (チチ松村
(3分36秒)
<IN THE GARDEN XNHL-12001>

「スカーレット・タウン」 (ボブ・ディラン
(4分10秒)
コロムビア SICP3663>

「シャドウ・オブ・ザ・サン」 (アーマ・トーマス)
(4分06秒)
<REAL GONE MUSIC RGM-0224>


Jazz Record Requests
Make a request...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnn9

Sat 10 May 2014
17:00
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b042zbxd
Alyn Shipton's selection of listeners' requests includes New Orleans jazz from Chris Barber and George Lewis, big band jazz from Stan Kenton and the small group of Teddy Wilson. He also recalls the work of the late Alice Babs with the Swe-Danes.

Music Played

01. With A Smile and A Song
Teddy Wilson and His Orchestra
Performer: Hot Lips Page. Performer: Pee Wee Russell. Performer: Chu Berry. Performer: Allan Reuss. Performer: Sally Gooding.
Chronological Teddy Wilson 1937 - 38, Classics, 12

02. My Lady
Stan Kenton
Performer: Buddy Childers. Performer: Maynard Ferguson. Performer: Conte Candoli. Performer: Don Dennis. Performer: Ruben McFall. Performer: Bob Burgess. Performer: Frank Rosolino. Performer: Keith Moon. Performer: BILL RUSSO. Performer: George Roberts. Performer: Vinnie Dean. Performer: Lee Knoitz. Performer: Richie Kamuca. Performer: Bill Holman. Performer: Bob Gioga. Performer: Sal Salvador. Performer: Don Bagley. Performer: Stan Levey.
New Concepts of Artistry in Rhythm, Capitol, 2

03. Side By Side
Swe-Danes
Performer: Alice Babs. Performer: Ulrik Neumann. Performer: Svend Asmussen.
Taet Pa Vol 3, SlapStick, 9

04. Cherokee
Steve Melling Clark Tracey Special Septet
Performer: Mark Armstrong. Performer: Simon Allen. Performer: Dave O'Higgins. Performer: Mark Bassey. Performer: Geoff Gascoyne.
Special One, MellJazz, 7

05. You're Getting To Be A Habit With Me
Diana Krall
Performer: Russell Malone. Performer: Christian McBride.
Love Scenes, Impulse, 8

06. Come Sunday
Oscar Peterson and Ben Webster
Performer: Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen. Performer: Tony Inzalaco.
During This Time, Art of Grove, 5

07. The Champ
Dizzy Gillespie
Performer: J.J. Johnson. Performer: Budd Johnson. Performer: Milt Jackson. Performer: Percy Heath. Performer: Art Blakey.
Groovin' High, Living Era, 24

08. Davenport Blues
Alex Welsh
Performer: Fred Hunt.
Strike One, Lake, 4

09. Ice Cream
George Lewis
Performer: Lawrence Marrero. Performer: Alcide Slow Drag Pavageau. Performer: Warren "Baby" Dodds. Performer: Jim Robinson.
New Orleans Revival, Marshall Cavendish Jazz Greats, 12

10. When The Saints Go Marching In
Chris Barber
Performer: Pat Halcox. Performer: Monty Sunshine. Performer: Eddie Smith. Performer: Dick Smith. Performer: Graham Burbidge. Performer: Ottilie Patterson.
1957-58, Lake, 3


Geoffrey Smith's Jazz
Geoffrey Smith's Jazz does exactly what it says on the tin: a weekly programme in which Geoffrey Smith shares his love of jazz, through an exploration of its great writers, singers and players, as told from his own individual perspective.
Each programme take us through his personally-selected playlist of tracks. It's loosely-themed; maybe a great artist, a jazz style or something more off-the-wall. But that serves as just the start of a fascinating journey to the heart of the music Geoffrey is so passionate about.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01h5z0s

Clark Terry
Sun 11 May 2014
00:00
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b042zk73
Mentor to Miles Davis, key player with Duke Ellington; trumpeter Clark Terry is the premier elder statesman of jazz. Geoffrey Smith picks highlights from a great career, including his unique vocal hit, "Mumbles'", a scat masterpiece with Oscar Peterson.

Music Played

01. Normania
Count Basie
Performer: Clark Terry. Performer: Weasel Parker.
The Indispensable Count Basie, RCA, 17

02. The Golden Bullet
Count Basie
Performer: Clark Terry. Performer: Buddy DeFranco. Performer: Charlie Rouse. Performer: Serge Chaloff. Performer: Freddie Green. Performer: Jimmy Lewis. Performer: Buddy Rich.
Blues By Basie, Columbia, 2

03. Perdido
Duke Ellington
Performer: Clark Terry. Performer: Willie Cook. Performer: Ray Nance. Performer: Britt Woodman. Performer: William "Cat" Anderson.
Ellington Uptown, Columbia/Legacy, 5

04. Up and Down, Up and Down
Duke Ellington
Performer: Clark Terry.
SUCH SWEET THUNDER, PHILIPS, 7

05. Trust In Me
Clark Terry
Performer: Thelonious Monk. Performer: Sam Jones. Performer: Philly Joe Jones.
In Orbit, Riverside, 3

06. Hymn
Clark Terry
Performer: Bob Brookmeyer. Performer: Roger Kellaway. Performer: Bill Crow. Performer: Dave Bailey.
Tonight, Fontana, 5

07. The Brotherhood Of Man
Oscar Peterson
Performer: Clark Terry. Performer: Ray Brown. Performer: Ed Thigpen.
Oscar Peterson Trio + One, Verve, 1

08. Mumbles
Oscar Peterson
Performer: Clark Terry. Performer: Ray Brown. Performer: Ed Thigpen.
Oscar Peterson Trio + One, Verve, 5

09. Blueport
Gerry Mulligan
Performer: Clark Terry. Performer: Jim Reider. Performer: Bob Brookmeyer.
Gerry Mulligan At The Village Vanguard, Verve, 1

10. Serenade to a Bus Seat
James Williams
Performer: Clark Terry. Performer: Billy Pierce. Performer: Steve Nelson. Performer: Christian McBride. Performer: Tony Reedus.
Talkin' Trash, DIW, 1

11. What a Little Moonlight Can Do
Steve Tyrell
Performer: Clark Terry.
Standard Time, Sony, 10


Private Passions
Guests from all walks of life discuss their musical loves and hates.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnv3

Brenda Hale
Sun 11 May 2014
12:00
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b042zk7c

Lady Hale is a trailblazer. 30 years ago, she was the first woman to be appointed to the Law Commission (and the youngest person there); 10 years ago, she was the first female judge to be appointed to the Appellate Committee of the House of Lords (as Baroness Hale of Richmond) and there hasn't been another woman appointed since. Last year she was appointed as the Deputy President of the Supreme Court. Where she is still the only woman! Her judgments have changed family and equality law in this country; and despite her eminent role she remains outspoken about domestic violence, women in prison, and the rights of children.

In Private Passions, she talks about her upbringing in Yorkshire, one of three daughters - and about being in such a minority when she began to study law. Lady Hale chooses music which connects with her professional life: operas about crime, punishment and injustice (Beethoven's Fidelio and Britten's Billy Budd). She talks about how she'd like to change the law on divorce, and why she loves Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro. She discusses the conflict between reason and emotion in her work, and reveals that she is haunted by certain cases from the past. And she reflects on the way her judicial role has revealed the worst - but also the best - of human nature. Finally, during this season of exam stress, she reveals her revision tip: march up and down the room, reciting the textbook and listening to Strauss.

Produced by Elizabeth Burke, for Loftus.

Music Played
Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes

00:04
[traditional]
Blow the wind Southerly
Singer: Kathleen Ferrier.

00:08
Richard Strauss
Der Rosenkavalier (Act III - Trio)
Orchestra: Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. Conductor: Christoph Eschenbach. Singer: Renée Fleming. Singer: Barbara Bonney. Singer: Susan Graham.

00:19
Johann Sebastian Bach
Mass in B minor (Gloria)
Orchestra: English Baroque Soloists. Conductor: John Eliot Gardiner.

00:28
Ludwig van Beethoven
Fidelio (Mir ist so wunderbar)
Orchestra: Sächsische Staatskapelle Dresden. Conductor: Karl Böhm. Singer: Edith Mathis. Singer: Gwyneth Jones. Singer: Franz Crass. Singer: Peter Schreier.

00:37
Benjamin Britten
Billy Budd (ending)
Orchestra: London Symphony Orchestra. Conductor: Richard Hickox. Singer: Alan Opie. Singer: Simon Keenlyside. Singer: Philip Langridge. Choir: London Symphony Chorus.

00:45
John Gardner
Tomorrow shall be my dancing day
Choir: St Paul's Girls'.

00:49
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Le Nozze di Figaro (Final scene)
Orchestra: Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. Conductor: Riccardo Muti. Singer: Dame Margaret Price. Singer: Jorma Hynninen. Singer: Thomas S. Allen.

00:57
Hubert Parry
I was glad
Choir: Choir of Westminster Abbey. Conductor: Martin Neary. Performer: Iain Simcock.


Words and Music
A sequence of music interspersed with well-loved and less familiar poems and prose read by leading actors
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006x35f

Flânerie - a view of a Paris
Sun 11 May 2014
17:30
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b043573s
An imagined serendipitous journey through Paris's streets, past and present, told through its literature and music, with the actors Tamsin Greig and Neil Pearson

The Flâneur - "that aimless stroller who loses himself in the crowd, who has no destination and goes wherever caprice or curiosity directs his or her steps".

It was Baudelaire, in his "Fleurs du Mal" in the late 19th century, who created flânerie as a literary ideal for evoking the patterns and emotions of modern urban life in Paris; but the concept of the detached observer - casual, directionless, voyeuristic - who finds refuge within the crowded streets of the capital, had been around for some time. Balzac, writing in the years before the advent of Haussman's modern cityscape, had described flânerie as "the gastronomy of the eye". Later, the German writer and social-critic, Walter Benjamin, would use the experiences of the Parisian flâneur as illustrations for socio-political commentary.

In this edition of Words and Music, we - much in the spirit of the flâneur - take a casual musical and literary journey through Paris's imagined streets. Glimpses of buildings bring to mind the city's great history and its inhabitants; its poets, writers and composers. Imagine sauntering past Notre Dame and the neighbouring university: and the ribaldry of medieval Paris fills the mind's eye, evoking the words of Villon and Rabelais; of Victor Hugo describing the medieval skyline and the festive sound of the medieval bells.

Next on to the Louvre and the Marais, and echoes of the grandeur of Paris during the age of the Sun King; of Marie de Rabutin-Chantal de Sévingné's famous letters; of the music of Lully and Charpentier. Turn another corner, and find the youthful Marin Marais, lost and bewildered by the banks of the Seine - his voice, post-pubescent - his services no longer required in the Royal Chapel.

A hundred years on, and in the wretched area of Sainte-Antoine, Charles Dickens watches the abject poor seemingly rehearse events for one the city's least glorious moments; their hands and clothes stained with red wine, like blood.

Balzac lists the varied "physiognomy" of the Parisian back streets in the years just before Haussmann re-invented the city - we follow him into some of Paris's more forbidding and darker haunts; while later - into the Belle Époque and beyond - coursing among the newer buildings, parks and thoroughfares - Baudelaire, Proust and Zola observe Parisian life with a multitude of senses and a painterly eye. As do Fauré, Verlaine and Debussy.

"Among all cities, there is none more associated with the book than Paris", wrote Walter Benjamin. Ernest Hemingway finds refuge in one of the city's necessary cafes, watching and transcribing, while Beria and Bechet set the same thoughts to music.

Finally, our serendipitous journey presents an aspect of the modern Paris: not the beautiful; nor the bustling, fashionable and vibrant; but urban nonetheless. The city at its edge - people at the periphery. The world in the Banlieue: of graffiti and the blues.

Producer's Note
The Flâneur - "that aimless stroller who loses himself in the crowd, who has no destination and goes wherever caprice or curiosity directs his or her steps".

It was Baudelaire, in his "Fleurs du Mal" in the late 19th century, who created flâneurie as a literary ideal for evoking the patterns and emotions of modern urban life in Paris; but the concept of the detached observer - casual, directionless, voyeuristic - who finds refuge within the crowded streets of the capital, had been around for some time. Balzac, writing in the years before the advent of Haussman's modern cityscape, had described flâneurie as "the gastronomy of the eye". Later, the German writer and social-critic, Walter Benjamin, would use the experiences of the Parisian flâneur as illustrations for socio-political commentary.

In this edition of Words and Music, we - much in the spirit of the flâneur - take a casual musical and literary journey through Paris's imagined streets. Glimpses of buildings bring to mind the city's great history and its inhabitants; its poets, writers and composers. Imagine sauntering past Notre Dame and the neighbouring university: and the ribaldry of medieval Paris fills the mind's eye, evoking the words of Villon and Rabelais; of Victor Hugo describing the medieval skyline and the festive sound of the medieval bells.

Next on to the Louvre and the Marais, and echoes of the grandeur of Paris during the age of the Sun King; of Marie de Rabutin-Chantal de Sévingné's famous letters; of the music of Lully and Charpentier. Turn another corner, and find the youthful Marin Marais, lost and bewildered by the banks of the Seine - his voice, post-pubescent - his services no longer required in the Royal Chapel.

A hundred years on, and in the wretched area of Sainte-Antoine, Charles Dickens watches the abject poor seemingly rehearse events for one the city's least glorious moments; their hands and clothes stained with red wine, like blood.

Balzac lists the varied "physiognomy" of the Parisian back streets in the years just before Haussmann re-invented the city - we follow him into some of Paris's more forbidding and darker haunts; while later - into the Belle Époque and beyond - coursing among the newer buildings, parks and thoroughfares - Baudelaire, Proust and Zola observe Parisian life with a multitude of senses and a painterly eye. As do Fauré, Verlaine and Debussy.

"Among all cities, there is none more associated with the book than Paris", wrote Walter Benjamin. Ernest Hemingway finds refuge in one of the city's necessary cafes, watching and transcribing, while Beria and Bechet set the same thoughts to music.

Finally, our serendipitous journey presents an aspect of the modern Paris. Not the beautiful; nor the bustling, fashionable and vibrant; but urban nonetheless. The city at its edge - people at the periphery. The world in the Banlieue: of graffiti and the blues.

Chris Wines (producer)

Music Played
Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes

00:00
Frederick Delius
Paris: Song of a Great City
Performer: Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Richard Hickox (conductor).
EMI 49932, Tr 3

EE Cummings
“Paris; the April sunset completely utters”, read by Neil Pearson

Edmund White
“The Flaneur - A stroll through the paradoxes of Paris, read by Tamsin Greig and Neil Pearson

00:06
Guillaume de Machaut
Messe de Notre Dame - Kyrie
Performer: The Hilliard Ensemble, Paul Hillier (conductor).
Hyperion CDA 66358, Tr 1

François Rabelais
Pantagruel and Gargantua, read by Neil Pearson

00:09
Claude Debussy
Trois Ballades de François Villon
Performer: Christopher Maltman (baritone), Malcolm Martineau (piano).
Hyperion CDA67357, Tr 21

00:11
Clément Janequin
Voulez ouyr les cris de Paris
Performer: Ensemble Clement Janequin.
Harmonia Mundi HMT901072, Tr 1

Victor Hugo
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (excerpt), read by Tamsin Greig

00:12
Frederick Delius
Paris: Song of a Great City
Performer: Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Richard Hickox (conductor).
EMI 49932, Tr 3

00:14
Jean-Baptiste Lully
Overture and Act 3 Scene 4, ‘Le Sommeil’
Singer: Gilles Ragon (Counter tenor). Ensemble: Les Arts Florissants. Conductor: William Christie.
HARMONIA MUNDI 7488192632, Tr 1

The Letters of Marie de Rabutin-Chantal de Sévingné
Excerpt read by Tamsin Greig

Pascal Quignard
All the Mornings of the world (excerpt), read by Neil Pearson

00:24
Marin Marais
Pieces de Viole: Book 4 ‘Le Reveuse’
Performer: Jordi Savall (viole).
ALIA VOX AVSA9872, CD4 Tr8

00:28
Jean-Baptiste Davaux
Symphonie Concertante Mêlée D'Airs Patriotiques for 2 violins & orchestra in G - 1st mvt
Performer: Werner Ehrhardt (violin), Andrea Keller (violin), Concerto Köln.
CAPRICCIO 10280, Tr1

Charles Dickens
A Tale of Two Cities (excerpt), read by Tamsin Greig

00:34
Hector Berlioz
Lélio, Op. 14b - Movement V: La harpe éolienne
Performer: Berlin Komische Oper Orchestra, Rolf Reuter (conductor).
BERLIN CLASSICS 002149BC, Tr 10

00:37
Giacomo Puccini
La Boheme - Act 2 Opening
Performer: Orchestra e coro dell'Accademia di Santa Ceclia, Tullio Serafin (conductor).
DECCA 4255342, Tr 11

Balzac
Ferragus (excerpt), read by Neil Pearson

00:38
Frédéric Chopin
Piano Sonata No 2 in Bb minor Op35 - 4. Finale
Performer: Nikita Magaloff (piano).
PHILIPS 456 376-2, Tr8

00:40
Giacomo Puccini
La Boheme - Act 3 duet "Mimi - Speravo di trovarvi qui"
Performer: Renata Tebaldi (soprano), Ettore Bestianini (baritone), Orchestra e coro dell'Accademia di Santa Ceclia, Tullio Serafin (conductor).
DECCA 4255342, CD2 Tr3

00:45
Frederick Delius
Paris: Song of a Great City
Performer: Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Richard Hickox (conductor).
EMI 49932, Tr 3

Baudelaire
Fleurs du Mal: ‘To a Passer-By’, read by Tamsin Greig and Neil Pearson

00:46
Gabriel Fauré
La bonne chanson, Op 61 - III "La lune blanche luit dans les bois"
Performer: Camille Maurane (baritone), Lily Bienvenu (piano).
PHILIPS 438 970 -2, Tr 10

00:49
Claude Debussy
Petite Suite - I. En Bateau (orchestrated by Henri Büsser)
Performer: Orchestre. National de L'O.R.T.F, Jean Martinon (conductor).
EMI CDM7695892, Tr 7

Marcel Proust
Swann’s Way I (Vol. 1 of “Remembrance of Things Past”), read by Neil Pearson

00:53
Jacques Offenbach
Overture "La Belle Hélène"
Performer: City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Louis Frémaux (conductor).
EMI CDM7630242, Tr 14

Emile Zola
The Ladies Delight, read by Tamsin Greig

00:57
Gustave Charpentier
Louise Act 3 - "Depuis le jour"
Singer: Ileana Cotrubaş. Singer: Plácido Domingo. Orchestra: New Philharmonia Orchestra. Conductor: Georges Prêtre.
SONY S3K 46429, 11

01:01
Danse les Musettes a Paris
"Danse les Musettes a Paris"
Performer: Germaine Beria, Les Vagabonds.
FREMEAUX & ASSOCIÉS FA 005, Tr 2

Ernest Hemingway
A Moveable Feast (excerpt), read by Neil Pearson

01:02
Sidney Bechet
Petite Fleur
Performer: Sidney Bechet.
EUROPE 1710440, Tr 5

Jeanine Basinger
"A Woman's View: How Hollywood Spoke to Women 1930-1960", (excerpt) read by Tamsin Greig

01:06
U&G Hermosa
La Lambada
Performer: Koama.
TELSTAR TTVCD3067, CD2 Tr 8

Mehdi Charef
Tea in the Harem (excerpt), read by Tamsin Greig

01:07
Jacques Higelin
Banlieue Boogie Blues
Performer: Jacques Higelin.
EMI 796482, Tr 2

01:12
Frederick Delius
Paris: Song of a Great City
Performer: Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Richard Hickox (conductor).
EMI 49932, Tr 3

James Fenton
In Paris with you (excerpt), read by Neil Pearson


Get It On With Bryan Burnett
Two hours of requests on Radio Scotland.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0079fy9

1984
Fri 9 May 2014
18:10
BBC Radio Scotland
Bryan Burnett with two hours of hits from 1984.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b041ymlq
Tonight we're turning back the clock 30 years and celebrating the hits of 1984. From Frankie's Two Tribes to Prince's When Doves Cry, to Duran Duran's Reflex, what chart toppers do you want to hear from 1984? Get in touch.

Music Played

01. Relax
Frankie Goes to Hollywood

02. Ain't Nobody
Rufus and Chaka Khan

03. Dancing In the Dark
Bruce Springsteen

04. Only When You Leave
Spandau Ballet

05. I Can Dream About You
Dan Hartman

06. Wouldn't It Be Good
Nik Kershaw

07. Young At Heart
The Bluebells

08. The Killing Moon
Echo & The Bunnymen

09. The Reflex
Duran Duran

10. Love & Pride
King

11. When Does Cry
Prince

12. Don't Go Back to Rockville
R.E.M.

13. What's Love Got To Do With It
Tina Turner

14. White Lines (Don't Do It)
Grandmaster Flash

15. Big in Japan
Alphaville

16. Let's Hear it For the Boy
Deniece Williams

17. Shout to the Top
The Style Council

18. Pride (In the Name of Love)
U2

19. Jump
Van Halen

20. Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now
The Smiths

1984
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b017890q
Scotland's Best Voices
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00w6cwx
http://d.hatena.ne.jp/yasu-san/20101130/